Painter, born in Bishop Auckland, Co. Durham. He studied at Darlington Technical College, 1906-08, at the Leeds School of Art, 1908-14, the RCA, 1914-18, and Slade, 1918. Between 1915 and 1918 he did war work, making tools. In 1919 he took on Sickert's studio, 6 Mall Studios, Hampstead, where he was later joined by Herbert Read, Barbara Hepworth and Henry Moore. From 1922 until 1955 he was Head of Art Teaching in the Architectural Department, Northern Polytechnic, Holloway Road. In 1932 he began making his first abstract works, exhibiting during the next decade in many abstract and constructive shows in England, France and the USA. In 1934 he exhibited with the 7&5 Society, along with the likes of Ben and Winifred Nicholson, Ivon Hitchens, Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth and John Piper. During World War II he returned partly to figurative work, making paintings of the Blitz. From the 1950s he returned to large abstract paintings, realising many of the abstract compositions he had sketched out on a small scale in the previous decade, when materials had been in short supply. In 1951 he made a l0 ¥ 30 ft. fluorescent paint mural for the Festival of Britain, and began working with ply glass for murals. In 1958 he suffered three strokes, which left him unable to move or talk. Partly for this reason he is today less well-known than many of his contemporaries, but he was one of the key figures in the development of abstract art in Britain. He is represented in the collection of the Tate and internationally.

Simon Guthrie, The Life and Art of John Cecil Stephenson: A Victorian Painter's Journey to Abstract Expressionism, Cartmel Press Associates, 1997.

When in the fifties, I became engaged to Simon (David)Guthrie, he took me to meet his mother, Kathleen Guthrie,and his stepfather, Cecil Stephenson. They lived in a studio;to me, a novel idea. 6, Mall Studios, in Belsize Park, had beenCecil’s habitat for some thirty years. The main studio was alarge room with a big north light running from the floor upinto the roof. In one corner were Cecil’s easel and paints;in another were his machine tools and lathes and in a thirdwas his piano [figure 1]. The fourth corner contained a sofaand some bookcases, where Kathleen could sit and read,or listen to Cecil playing his favourite Brahms or Chopin.Kathleen was Cecil’s second wife. She was herself a professionalartist; a Sladey-lady and like Cecil, a founder memberof the Hampstead Artists’ Council. There wasn’t room for herto paint in the studio,so Cecil had built her a painting shed inthe garden[figure 2]. The garden also had a small pond with alarge population of newts and some very decorative Koi carp,and a monorail for Cecil’s hand-built model steam locomotive.Cecil was a warm-hearted man of many talents, butmodest and self-effacing, and meticulous in all his manyunder-takings. His output of paintings was small, due to thepressures of earning a living by teaching, and his inability torefuse requests for his engineering skills, whether it was tomake a new part for a friend’s old Lagonda, dash off a metalstaircase or a new set of wrought-iron gates. Perhaps he wasovershadowed by his brilliant friend and erstwhile neighbour,Ben Nicholson. Other neighbours included Barbara Hepworthand John Skeaping, the art critic and writer Sir Herbert Read,and later, Henry Moore and Bernard Meadows.When Cecil died, he left quite a body of works which thefamily have cherished and enjoyed for the last forty years.These include most of the pictures in this exhibition. Simonretired from academic life in 1990 and he devoted himself totrying to promote his stepfather’s reputation. First he wrotea biography, based largely on Cecil’s abbreviated but carefullykept diaries. He then devoted much time and energy totrying to persuade a gallery to mount a proper retrospectiveof Cecil’s work, particularly the early abstracts. RememberingCecil’s northern roots, he tried hard to interest various galleriesin the north of England in such an exhibition. Sadly hisambition was never achieved. So his family were very willingto co-operate with the suggestion of The Fine Art Society tomount this show, in the hope that many more people couldderive pleasure and satisfaction from these fine paintings.